University in Munich Develops RFID-Enabled Log Harvesting

Dec 01, 2006—The Technical University of Munich (TU Munich) has developed a prototype application using an industrial staple gun mounted on a single-grip harvester to attach RFID tags to felled logs. The system is designed to help forestry companies track the multistep process of cutting down trees and transporting them to a processing plant. This often involves four or five independent contractors. Thanks to the new application, those involved will have a better understanding of how much wood has been harvested, and of the location of the wood at each stage of the harvesting process.

The industrial staple gun is built onto the harvester head, a machine that grabs a tree, brings it to the ground and cuts off its limbs. Tags are automatically stapled to the side of each log's lower end. This automated process sets TU Munich’s application apart from other RFID forestry systems, such as those utilizing RFID tags shaped like nails that must be hammered into logs by hand after a lumberjack fells a tree (see RFID Chops Timber Costs).

The RFID-enabled harvester staples tags into logs automatically to help track timber moving through the processing line.

In addition to developing the tagging device, the team attached an RFID interrogator to the harvester head to perform the first reading of the stapled tag. The system transfers the tag's unique identification number, the only information stored on the tag, to the harvester's onboard computer. The computer then links other information collected by the harvester, such as the log's length and diameter, to the tag's ID number.

The passive RFID tag, manufactured by X-ident Technology, is in the form of a flexible plastic card about the size of a credit card, containing a chip made by NXP Semiconductors. The chip functions on the 13.56 MHz frequency and conforms to the ISO 15693 standard. The tag has a read range of 3.28 to 4.9 feet. The staple goes through the middle of the tag without harming it, since the tag's antenna and chip are on the outer edges. Scemtec Transponder Technology supplied the interrogator.